Results 281 to 290 of about 231,321 (295)
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Mycobacterium bovis Skin Infection

2017
The bovine tubercle bacillus must firstly be placed in context among the other agents of tuberculosis [1–5]. In the early decades of the twentieth century, bacteriologists recognized four varieties of tubercle bacilli (human, bovine, avian and cold-blooded), depending on the life forms from which they were isolated.
Bonamonte D., Filoni A., Angelini G.
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Mycobacterium bovis infection in a dog

Veterinary Record, 2006
to a degree determined by the level of exposure, the level of innate resistance, predominant immu-nological pathways, type of husbandry, population density, interactions with other susceptible species and type of habitat (Morris and others 1994).
I A P McCandlish   +5 more
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Wildlife hosts forMycobacterium bovis [PDF]

open access: possibleVeterinary Record, 2013
Mycobacterium bovis has an extremely wide host range, encompassing both domestic and wild mammals. There appears to be great variation between host species and even between individuals in susceptibility to infection. There is also variation in the speed of progression of the disease and, consequently, the risk of onward transmission.
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Human infections with Mycobacterium bovis.

The American review of respiratory disease, 1974
Two patients with tuberculosis due to Mycobacterium bovis were identified at The Mount Sinai Hospital from 1970 through 1973. In addition, 2 isolates of M.
S. Stanley Schneierson   +2 more
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Papulonecrotic Tuberculid Secondary to Mycobacterium bovis

Archives of Dermatology, 1978
A patient with papulonecrotic tuberculid had a pruritic papular eruption associated with constitutional symptoms. The eruption flared whenever the patient received low doses of prednisone to control symptoms of temporal arteritis. A cervical lymph node biopsy specimen demonstrated acid-fast bacilli, and Mycobacterium bovis grew on the cultures.
Roy S. Rogers   +2 more
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Mycobacterium bovis infection in cats

Veterinary Record, 2014
BETWEEN December 2012 and March 2013, a veterinary practice in Newbury (west Berkshire) diagnosed nine cases of Mycobacterium bovis infection in domestic cats. In seven of those cases the diagnosis was confirmed by bacteriological culture. The nine affected cats belonged to different households and six of them resided within a 250 metre radius.
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Revisiting Mycobacterium bovis

The Journal of Otolaryngology, 2002
Kevin Higgins   +3 more
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Therapy for Mycobacterium bovis

The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 2004
Dennis Murray, Richard F. Jacobs
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Mycobacterium bovis (BCG) vaccination

Medical Journal of Australia, 1992
J A Streeton, Richard Lumb, David Shaw
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Vaccination of cattle against Mycobacterium bovis

Tuberculosis, 2001
Protection of cattle against bovine tuberculosis by vaccination could be an important control strategy in countries where there is persistence of Mycobacterium bovis infection in wildlife and in developing countries where it is not economical to implement a 'test and slaughter' control programme. Early field trials with Bacille Calmette Guerin (BCG) M.
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